Monday, June 27, 2016

As
a lifelong Liverpool FC fan, though not understanding it at the time I was
growing up a few miles from Anfield, with my first identity being formed by epic European games played by the
great teams of the nineteen-seventies and eighties, what was culturally
inculcated into us was not so much blind loyalty; (although as a
consequence of what happened on the pitch that was a large part of it)
but, because we were the best team deserving to win - a sense of blunt, clear-eyed fairness, and straight-talking honesty of critical analyses from the fans.

Because
'our' team played the better class of footie. From the age of seven to
twenty-three we were on top. Not only in England but in Europe.

There
was something very special about big European nights in Liverpool, and I
can remember forty-one years ago and thousands of Liverpool fans first mass exodus to a European cup final
and victory over Borussia Mönchengladbach - a three one thriller in Rome -
more clearly than most of the nineties.

Then
retaining it the next year, in a boring one nil win over Belgian club
Brugge at Wembley in 1978. And the heartbreak of being knocked out in
the first round the following season by our main domestic rival of those
years, Nottingham Forest, who went on to win their first European Cup that year,
1979. And us regaining it two years later, in '81,
with left back Alan Kennedy's eighty-second minute goal, beating Real
Madrid one nil in Paris.

Tempered by sorrowful scenes of soccer hooliganism by
Liverpool fans abroad. As ITN reporter Tony Francis told us watching
on telly at home:

'Once
again British soccer fans have disgraced themselves abroad. But there
was somehow a grim predictability about it all. And yet the French
soccer authorities aren't entirely blameless. By allocating only 12,000
tickets, when at least three times as many people have arrived, was
only asking for trouble.'

And then a penultimate victorious fourth final beating and breaking the hearts of every Roma fan in their
home park, with another Kennedy winner, in a penalty shoot out
two years
later at Stadio Olimpico, 1983. Only to lose it again the following
year against the Italian team Juventus in the original sin, stain and
tragedy of the Heysel Stadium disaster.

Where Liverpool
supporters, after an initial outbreak of flare-throwing between them,
thuggishly charged at Juventus fans, breaching a fence separating them
from a "neutral area"; and the fleeing Italian supporters were crushed
against a concrete wall that fell down on them, killing
39 Juventus fans and injuring six hundred others.

As a result English clubs received a five-year ban from entering any European
competition, thus ending a period of great success for English clubs in
the European Cup.

Tragedy again struck in 1989 with the Hillsborough disaster, at that year's semi-final of the FA cup in Sheffield with Nottingham Forest; after police deliberately refused to open until it was far too late, gates that would have relieved the crowd pressure that crushed to death96 LFC fans , and injured 766.

In
the immediate aftermath a panicked and corrupt police began a massive coverup
operation, feeding the rabid right wing Thatcher-supporting national press lies about the LFC fans' behaviour,
that were repeated and published, by the Murdoch press especially, as
they routinely and racily vilify up to this day any number of groups of hopeless, poor people without a voice.

Currently targeting with their brand of textually transmitted diseases, infecting with their poison the millions of under-educated white English people, stirring up division between British Asians, British black people, European immigrants, those fleeing the terror of Afghanistan, Libyan, and Syrian refugees.

The
vilest slander was that supporters were violent and drunkenly urinating on dead,
dying, and injured family, friends and fellow fans, laughing as they did so. Yorkshire police's criminal behaviour was entirely to blame, and the families fought tooth and nail to pries the truth from them, as the police kept it covered up, resisting until the chief figures in the cover up died and retired.

And the injustice of them placing their own guilt onto devastated LFC fans, only fortified the people of the city's resolve to expose the
vile lies concocted by panicked cops and spread by the Sun, painting the dead and dying as out of control drunken animals in an orgy of violence.

This grievous wrong resulted in a twenty-seven year campaign that eventually led to this
year's Justice for the 96, and vindication by jury at the Hillsborough Inquest, which delivered its verdict of unlawful killing two months ago.

~

And
though the fans have a chequered history, the LFC football philosophy
that brought two decades of success on the pitch was very simple. Start
in defence and work your way out from
there. You do not go out to win, but not lose. A very subtle and
challenging mentality to get right.

Liverpool were
known for having an impenetrable defence, Fortress Anfield, with the
defenders just as feted as forwards and strikers.

Seventies
home town captain, Liverpool hardman, Tommy 'Chopper' Smith, the
Anfield Iron, who 'wasn't born, he was quarried', Shankely said of him.

Midfield
scouser Jimmy Case, with one of the most powerful kicks in football,
whose size and tackling strength terrorised opposition players into submission. The slick Scottish-Scouse twin-engine of midfield, Terry McDermot and Ian Callaghan, who rarely lost the ball, and were as equally at home going forward and scoring, as defending and taking the ball back, playing a game of pass, move, and constant possession.

And
then the forwards and goal-scoring legends. Kevin Keegan, who banged
home twenty-two goals in his second season, two of which won us our
first (of three) UEFA Cup, in 1973.

When we first
set on the road to being crowned Kings of Europe, beating for the first
time in a two leg home and away final, our earliest arch rival German
team, Borussia Mönchengladbach; who we beat again four years later to
win the first European Cup final against them in Rome '77.

Supersub
Scouser, David Fairclough, a ginger haired pocket rocket talisman who
came on at crucial points when we needed goals in the final third to win
important matches. And King Kenny Dalglish, the laconic Glaswegian
striker and top goal scorer in the sacred number seven shirt he wore
when the original English European export Keegan left to play for
Hamburg.

England captain, Emlyn Hughes, Welsh wizard
Ian Rush, and the England goalkeeper Ray Clemence - replaced by Bruce
Grobbelaar. Whose bendy-kneed antics in Rome '83 put off two of the four
penalty takers it took to miss before Alan Kennedy banged it home again
and won us our fourth European cup final.

A
successful technique mimicked to winning effect by Poland goalkeeper,
Jerzy Dudek, in Istanbul 2005. What many fans and neutrals claim is the
best complete, exciting game of club football ever played in the
Northern hemisphere. Twenty-one years later.

The
time we waited for a fifth victory in the European cup. A night fans had
dreamed of since a dark and curly headed captain Souness last held old
big ears aloft in Rome when the price of a pint of mild in the Buck Ith
Vine in Ormskirk bygone times was 40p.

A
night eleven years ago when Scouse football saint and England captain,
Steven Gerrard, was rewarded by the gods for his determination, grit and
loyalty to a team with one of the top three most culturally cohesive,
potent, and historically significant soccer records in the UK, Britain,
Ireland, and Europe.

One of the world's most loved
and romantic teams, with incredible highs, and terrible devastating
lows, reflecting and representing the people of Liverpool, and that
south-west region of Lancashire, half of the NW region of England where
seven million of us North West working-class English folk live, love,
dream, and believe, with all our flaws, guts and glory, in something that we all share. Humanity.

And
so, spectacularly frozen out of Euro 2016 after being beaten by the feet, heart and collective belief of the tournament's smallest team, made up of part-time and amateur players representing the 300,000 people of Iceland, doing it for love alone, our 'special' boys struggling against a Sunday league team to do their hundred-thousand pound a week job of kicking a bag of wind into a large goal mouth, England did not deserve to win, because 'we' had no belief and
played like a bunch of directionless amateurs facing players on two-hundred thousand pound a week.

The ignominious night our home team's multi-millionaires representing the soccer hopes and dreams of fifty-three million people, got battered by non-league opposition, was brought about, in part, I suspect, by an out of the blue seismic once in a lifetime European wide cultural and political earthquake outside the game, which created a
collective emotional team state of utter head-battering shock, and instant straight down the middle gutting division of their psyches, in the immediate aftermath of learning the UK European Union Membership Referendum's 52%-48% Leave result.

The
LFC ethos of pure belief founded on a process of never losing, and winning most times the team went out and created the cultural soul of Lancashire's second largest city, was wholly absent in England's worst performance ever in any tournament.

But - B - E - L - I - E - F - did make an unexpected appearance in, what until last Wednesday had
also been a team of overpaid national embarrassments, in all its glorious magical
and victorious display. From the time we came out looking like winners, to the final whistle, when our belief in a dream team became a one in twenty year event of reality itself.

That has already been woven into mythic oral poetry by one of Ireland's more naturally gifted and influential living spoken-text love poets at work in the shakalak English language and lingo this druidic Darndale investigator of fact, lies and a truth-possessed poet in nobody's pocket, has woven in another great work of contemporary oral bardic culture and a spoken song emanating from the extra sensory perception area She uniquely bends and tilts to fit any spoken occasion.

Lilting a series of essentially verbal adventures, incidents, observations, tales, and extended fluidly invisible memorised practice of love songs to Dublin and the republic of John Cummins' uniquely individual inventions swiped from the air within first and skillfully spoken with the paint of fiction and a pencil of fact drawing into all of Her he brings to us in precisely dialed slices of language and lingo in all its formalities of back-slang cant, patois, prose-poetry rap-talk, verse and the spoken songs that thrive across the Ireland and entertain any audience.

Snug in Kookulinary bubbalin Dubalern songs of our very own dream we think trippingly toora loora laddy sung in a spoken song of She that brings for you and us, them and me, one and three, it takes only two to believe, that's all ye need to beat the odds, become s/he and be Her every breath the greatest living team in any league of poetry lovers, real and doggerel, this and that, that and this, that and this, that loving on our self sits in silent faith and from our heart turns dream into reality, water to wine, black into white and vice versa, ever spinning never ceasing all new always thing, O spontaneous diddle dee spirit within and without dae do tha dunt thee lawk.

The LFC belief at the match in Lille meant that the team of the Republic either went out as damp squibs, surrendering all faith, hope, and ability that on all but two of our previous fourteen meetings froze in the face of such a better and more illustrious team (four time world-cup winners, seven times finalists) that statistically were odds on favourites to dump us out of the tournament, in what looked odds on to be another embarrassing car crash of inglorious timid frozen clueless capitulation, caused by nought but the phantasmagorical paranoia of our own collective mind.

That, pulled off, is now up there as a
two decade high. To do what we achieved.

And it was
something powerful alright, because up til l that point I'd been
reading of how great the Irish fans were abroad, without sharing in any of the collective buzz, because half of me was sickened and poisoned by the
behaviour of English, French, and Russian thugs at the very start of the tournament in
France.

But on Wednesday, with just one performance
of LFC style belief by a team that until then looked devoid of it; I
once more fell in love fully with Ireland, again. Because it was the LFC
ethos 'we' displayed. My earliest positive and most powerful cultural
influence that transcends race, is more important than religion, nothing
to do with politics, and everything to do with a republic of poetry and prayer.

Humanity and love.

Grá agus siíocháin.

PS,
Pauline Swords, mother oh Muse bless us this faery woman of Ireland,
at home in heaven, give us this day a hopeful prayer, show through your
earthly servant this world and earth all share, within and without, from
beginning to end, as our maker and parent, through thee come chords,
conduits, and the channels of song for silly voices we lay bare before
you here as Her that guides our hand to write, our ears to listen, and
from your mouth speak in praise and prayer, of you who loves us all.

Oh
Mother of every living breath, of each and every prayer, create in this
tiny moment of a pointless silly game, the spontaneous cultural gold
mimicked and won this and every other day until the twelve of never, by
your ever loving son, who airs our songs of joy, freedom, love and sorrow.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

One of Browning's poems was first here in July 2010, Two in the Campagna, pre-forum-format-change, when the Reader was presented first with Carol's critical perspective topping the poem.

Back in the day the Potw Blog was feted, privileged and lucky to have regular voluntary contributions from the voice of a superlative post-modern
senior Dublin critic, the anonymous, anytimefrances.

Although the objects, subjects and targets of her killer rhetorical literary barbs may not
agree, her post-modern yet plainly anciently sourced eloquence was
untouchable in competitive conversation.

She could deconstruct the semiotic signs and signifiers of any text, re-tooling the language of any poem, and cleverly re-combine them as a shrewd and astute Reader into the wholly opposite map of their critical meaning, thru her uniquely hard-won and refined philosophical lens and perspectives created by and found from a deep familiarity with the tortuously recondite writings of Derrida, Freud, Foucault, Marxand Lacan. Carol took the position on Browning's poem:

"Two in the Campagna" is one of the most sombrely honest of love
poems, but its doubts and questions are so scrupulously recorded and so
beautifully, coherently woven together that it reassures us. For most of
the scientists of Browning's day, the designer of the universe was
still "in his Heaven", and the poet, by analogy, still at the centre of
his twisting, turning, but reassuringly symmetrical web of a poem.
Random, meaningless and incoherent modernity is still many decades in
the future.

That week atf was also on top form. She did not yield on any of the
deliberately provocative points she made, with any attack on her
position, of which there were many, responded to with a heightening of
eloquence and deepening of thought communicating a rare mind.

Her anonymous voice had a superlative critical ability, that relied
wholly on its own wit and inventiveness to stand out so exemplary on
this blog during its formative (2007-10) early-years period.

That most of the time was naturally witty and wise. Tho she was a
very divisive figure, who, in my mind, because we were firm and natural
allies, could do no rhetorical wrong.

...Of the few times I've attempted it, much to my shame, i've failed to fall in love with any of Robert Browning's dramatic monologues that I've tried to be enchanted by.The texts and voices that take immense pleasure and delight in creating subtle witty excursions into well thought-out in-jokes and the self-referential, meticulously wrought metrical stanzas that tell very involved tales stretched over long and rhythmically plodding lines from which one can hear a tone of confident earnestness in Browning's voice at the birth of modernism.Wholly civilised, educated, lyrically poetic, rational, well-intended, wise, and very witty, perhaps, but one which is clearly entombed in a state and point of English history, and the evolution of its class system, that will, one suspects, render this Victorian's voice eminently dull in the ear of most contemporary listeners reared on, and loving, as we do, our diets of rock n funk n roll, and the contemporary pop-pap poetic of the wholly synthetic and soulless electronically enhanced modified and manufactured voices lip-syncing banal meaningless gobbledygook and one-dimensional brainless messages that lyrically captivate the first world Anglophone social-media masses.We hear the well-wrought lines, recognise even perhaps their authenticity, ingenuity, integrity, high degree of literary inventiveness, and unceasingly metrical polish; but, i suspect, no magic spark of the mesmeric 'it' is heard in the ear or continually spotted by a majority of eyes in today's audience without a classical education, and reared on a constant cultural diet of contemporary meta-action and living the hyper-reality of fast-moving events....After four centuries of literary evolution this week's poem is situated at the very Victorian apex and pre-Edwardian peak of an ultra-metrical poetic; and cultural bubble within which a poem did not exist unless it was diligently composed, or dashed off, in the strict and straight forms that are immediately identifiable on the page to a contemporary eye.An entirely metrical poetic and collectively uniform technical measuring standard, that, unchanging, and evolving within strict metrical boundaries, for fifteen generations of poets, had wove a merry way from the first self-styled regius orator and poet-laureate, John Skelton, to the perfected Victorian lyric form of rhymers such as Barret, Blake, Bronte, Byron, Cook, Dickinson, Keats, Rossetti, Shelly, Harper, Tennyson, and Yeats.And one of my own lyrically overflowing favourite voices from this perfected poetic era, that, I think, when at his best, was one of the most experimentally inventive, and audaciously gifted linguistically innovative metrical practitioners of the formal Victorian lyric, whose best poems touch joint-close with the superlative language of Manley-Hopkins, in speaking the Divine tongue and imbas forosnai all the Victorian poets of all the schools and stripes of spirituality - from clearly Christian to the more secular transcendentalists - can be measured by, and, who, like this week's offering, is, for many readers an either/or love/hate poet: Algernon Charles Swinburne.All but William Butler Yeats, and most of the women poets, by and large far more socially and politically enlightened and advanced than the men, were unknowingly bound up in the final two and three generations of poets defined for four hundred uninterrupted years by the metricality of their verse.Most of the many Victorian poets, all but Yeats and a few others who wrote both sides of the literary shift, had the metrical foundations, basis, and four centuries ancient practice of modern English language poetry, rendered, if not obsolete, certainly supplanted culturally by the free-verse of American modernity. All but a handful of the Victorian English poets were unaware that posterity was going to canonise, as a majority of these now long forgotten Victorian poets would've no doubt considered him, the imposter Whitman, as the revolutionary antecedent and American godfather of a new modern anti-formal-lyric poetic, that the majorty of English language poets and doggerelists publishing today have as the sole one in which to practice, create, possess and publish ditties, and the odd stray whisp of eloquence and beauty combined into that which cannot be edited....Of a relative handful of contemporary readers who'll have read any of Browning's numerous monologue poems, a proportion will be of course life-long lovers of his dramatic and theatrical, lengthy epics, and experience this kind of densely metrical writing and reading material as the superlative poetic and literary bees knees.Whilst others, with less knowledge of this fascinating man and his history, perhaps, may well place his plodding and originally worded stanzas anywhere from slightly less than inspiring to ear-numbingly tedious.As any critic knows being praiseful in print is in the long-term far healthier for the human spirit, and easier to do well when it becomes a habit, than exhaustively spewing satirical invective and letting show how genuinely we (all) can cerebrally bleed and phantasmagorically hate something created wholly within our own imagination. The problem with which is that if the 'bitter prayer of satire' is all a voice works up to in print, as the unceasingly political writing of certain contemporary satirists prove, the one-sided creatively imbalanced and intellectually draining nature of it can and will tip the always satirically expressed voices into a visibly negative death spiral of the positive inner literary and humanly spiritual tongue.That all situating ourselves within the Humanities profess some connection with and love for.In this respect I wanted this week's poem to succeed and detain one's attention, and be able to positively respond to this classically canonised piece of Victorian verse, creating as formally a well-written reply, with as detached cool passion as the very best anonymous critics on the potw blog prove themselves capable of and do month in month out. But, alas what little Browning I have read left me cold.Tho i am not as foolish to believe that one's unfamiliarity with all of his dramatic monologues and personae poems is in any way a reflection of the true quality of Browning's verse. Because i also understand that the effect a poem makes within a Reader's imagination, depends entirely on the state of mind s/he is in at the point poem and person collide and combine.On one day, in a certain mood, we may read a Browning monologue, or any other poem, out loud, and fall into expressing it with pleasure and being led as we go by an unfurling surprise to the Frostean figure of the wisdom a poem makes and is when terminating on its final syllable at a poetically profound destination. Yet on a different day, in a different cerebral state, we may find ourselves not connecting at all with the exact same poem, and discover what delight we read, saw and heard previously, has spiritually vanished.

...

Listening to this recording of Browning's How they Brought the Good News From Ghent To Aix, it is clear that today's' ear tuned solely by Anglo-American free-verse hears with an eye seeing first this very metrically uniform, and, to our modern collective ear, incredibly dated novelty and all but extinct tradition of ploddingly predictable literary rhyme, that time and the contemporary cultural dumbing down process has dulled the sparkling originality of. What at the time were innovative word choices, from the very off to the very end.